2018 could be the year of flying cars

The aircraft giant, Airbus announced last year their plans to make a self-driving car, the CEO announced on Monday that those plans might be going into action sooner rather than later.

The company is hoping to have a working prototype of their self-driving car by the year’s end, CEO Tom Enders said at the DLD conference in Munich on Monday.

Airbus is only second in size to Boeing, and is developing three separate sky solutions to urban congestion. The company is working on a single-passenger vehicle, package delivery drones, and autonomous buses.

Traffic continues to worsen as 50 percent of the population currently lives in the city, and it is expected that by 2030, 60 percent of the population will, according to Airbus Group’s urban air mobility.

“One hundred years ago, urban transport went underground, now we have the technological wherewithal to go above ground. We are in an experimentation phase; we take this development very seriously. With flying, you don’t need to pour billions into concrete bridges and roads,” he said.

Last August, the company said they hoped to make flying, autonomous taxis a thing.

“Many of the technologies needed, such as batteries, motors and avionics are most of the way there,” Rodin Lyasoff said, the Airbus executive in charge of the burgeoning project.

Enders said the company hopes that flying cars would make infrastructure costs for the cities. He also noted that Airbus is making the cars as environmentally friendly as possible.

The company’s concept vehicle for the flying car is Vahana, a single-passenger vehicle, package delivery drones, and autonomous buses.

According to division CEO Rodin Lyasoff, Vahana is totally feasible.

“Many of the technologies needed, such as batteries, motors and avionics are most of the way there,” Lyasoff said. “In as little as 10 years, we could have products on the market that revolutionize urban travel for millions of people.”

The vehicles could potentially be used for ride sharing. The vehicles could also be used for package delivery. Airbus itself will not be a delivery business, but they do see retailers such as Amazon as potential customers for sky delivery.

The company is not waiting around for someone else to take their idea.

“This market will develop quickly once we are able to deploy the first vehicles in megacities and demonstrate the benefits of quiet, emission-free air transport at competitive prices,” said Jorg Muller, from Airbus’ corporate development department.